CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
BACKGROUND
[0002] The field of the disclosure relates generally to fiber communication networks, and
more particularly, to optical networks utilizing wavelength division multiplexing.
[0003] Telecommunications networks include an access network through which end user subscribers
connect to a service provider. Bandwidth requirements for delivering high-speed data
and video services through the access network are rapidly increasing to meet growing
consumer demands. At present, data delivery over the access network is growing by
gigabits(Gb)/second for residential subscribers, and by multi-Gb/s for business subscribers.
Present access networks are based on passive optical network (PON) access technologies,
which have become the dominant system architecture to meet the growing high capacity
demand from end users.
[0004] Gigabit PON and Ethernet PON architectures are conventionally known, and presently
provide about 2.5 Gb/s data rates for downstream transmission and 1.25 Gb/s for upstream
transmission (half of the downstream rate). 10 Gb/s PON (XG-PON or IEEE 10G-EPON)
has begun to be implemented for high-bandwidth applications, and a 40 Gb/s PON scheme,
which is based on time and wavelength division multiplexing (TWDM and WDM) has recently
been standardized. A growing need therefore exists to develop higher/faster data rates
per-subscriber to meet future bandwidth demand, and also increase the coverage for
services and applications, but while also minimizing the capital and operational expenditures
necessary to deliver higher capacity and performance access networks.
[0005] One known solution to increase the capacity of a PON is the use of WDM technology
to send a dedicated wavelength signal to end users. Current detection scheme WDM technology,
however, is limited by its low receiver sensitivity, and also by the few options available
to upgrade and scale the technology, particularly with regard to use in conjunction
with the lower-quality legacy fiber environment. The legacy fiber environment requires
operators to squeeze more capacity out of the existing fiber infrastructure to avoid
costs associated with having to retrench new fiber installment. Conventional access
networks typically include six fibers per node, servicing as many as 500 end users,
such as home subscribers. Conventional nodes cannot be split further and do not typically
contain spare (unused) fibers, and thus there is a need to utilize the limited fiber
availability in a more efficient and cost-effective manner.
[0006] Coherent technology has been proposed as one solution to increase both receiver sensitivity
and overall capacity for WDM-PON optical access networks, in both brown and green
field deployments. Coherent technology offers superior receiver sensitivity and extended
power budget, and high frequency selectivity that provides closely-spaced dense or
ultra-dense WDM without the need for narrow band optical filters. Moreover, a multi-dimensional
recovered signal experienced by coherent technology provides additional benefits to
compensate for linear transmission impairments such as chromatic dispersion (CD) and
polarization-mode dispersion (PMD), and to efficiently utilize spectral resources
to benefit future network upgrades through the use of multi-level advanced modulation
formats. Long distance transmission using coherent technology, however, requires elaborate
post-processing, including signal equalizations and carrier recovery, to adjust for
impairments experienced along the transmission pathway, thereby presenting significant
challenges by significantly increasing system complexity.
[0007] Coherent technology in longhaul optical systems typically requires significant use
of high quality discrete photonic and electronic components, such as digital-to-analog
converters (DAC), analog-to-digital converters (ADC), and digital signal processing
(DSP) circuitry such as an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) utilizing
CMOS technology, to compensate for noise, frequency drift, and other factors affecting
the transmitted channel signals over the long distance optical transmission. Coherent
pluggable modules for metro solution have gone through C Form-factor pluggable (CFP)
to CFP2 and future CFP4 via multi-source agreement (MSA) standardization to reduce
their footprint, to lower costs, and also to lower power dissipation. However, these
modules still require significant engineering complexity, expense, size, and power
to operate, and therefore have not been efficient or practical to implement in access
applications.
BRIEF SUMMARY
[0008] In one aspect, an injection locked transmitter for an optical communication network
includes a master seed laser source input substantially confined to a single longitudinal
mode, an input data stream, and a laser injected modulator including at least one
slave laser having a resonator frequency that is injection locked to a frequency of
the single longitudinal mode of the master seed laser source. The laser injected modulator
is configured to receive the master seed laser source input and the input data stream,
and output a laser modulated data stream.
[0009] In another aspect, an optical network communication system includes, an input signal
source, an optical frequency comb generator configured to receive the input signal
source and output a plurality of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs. Each of the
plurality of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs includes a first unmodulated signal
and a second unmodulated signal. The system further include a first transmitter configured
to receive the first unmodulated signal of a selected one of the plurality of phase
synchronized coherent tone pairs as a seed source and to output a first modulated
data stream, and a first receiver configured to receive the first modulated data stream
from the first transmitter and receive the second unmodulated signal of the selected
one of the plurality of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs as a local oscillator
source.
[0010] In yet another aspect, an optical network communication system includes an optical
hub including an optical frequency comb generator configured to output at least one
phase synchronized coherent tone pair having a first unmodulated signal and a second
unmodulated signal, and a downstream transmitter configured to receive the first unmodulated
signal as a seed source and to output a downstream modulated data stream. The system
further includes a fiber node and an end user including a downstream receiver configured
to receive the downstream modulated data stream from the downstream transmitter and
receive the second unmodulated signal as a local oscillator source.
[0011] In a still further aspect, a method of optical network processing includes steps
of generating at least one pair of first and second unmodulated phase synchronized
coherent tones, transmitting the first unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone
to a first transmitter as a seed signal, adhering downstream data, in the first transmitter,
to the first unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone to generate a first modulated
data stream signal, optically multiplexing the first modulated data stream signal
and the second unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone together within a hub
optical multiplexer, and communicating the multiplexed first modulated data stream
signal and the second unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone to a first receiver,
by way of fiber optics, for downstream heterodyne detection.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012] These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present disclosure will
become better understood when the following detailed description is read with reference
to the accompanying drawings in which like characters represent like parts throughout
the drawings, wherein:
FIG. 1 is a schematic illustration of an exemplary fiber communication system in accordance
with an exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure.
FIG. 2 is a schematic illustration depicting an exemplary transmitter that can be
utilized with the fiber communication system depicted in FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration depicting an alternative transmitter that can be
utilized with the fiber communication system depicted in FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a schematic illustration depicting an alternative transmitter that can be
utilized with the fiber communication system depicted in FIG. 1.
FIG. 5 is a schematic illustration depicting an alternative transmitter that can be
utilized with the fiber communication system depicted in FIG. 1.
FIG. 6 is a schematic illustration depicting an exemplary upstream connection that
can be utilized with the fiber communication system depicted in FIG. 1.
FIG. 7 is a schematic illustration depicting an exemplary processing architecture
implemented with the fiber communication system depicted in FIG. 1.
FIG. 8 is a flow chart diagram of an exemplary downstream optical network process.
FIG. 9 is a flow chart diagram of an exemplary upstream optical network process that
can be implemented with the downstream process depicted in FIG 8.
[0013] Unless otherwise indicated, the drawings provided herein are meant to illustrate
features of embodiments of this disclosure. These features are believed to be applicable
in a wide variety of systems including one or more embodiments of this disclosure.
As such, the drawings are not meant to include all conventional features known by
those of ordinary skill in the art to be required for the practice of the embodiments
disclosed herein.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0014] In the following specification and the claims, reference will be made to a number
of terms, which shall be defined to have the following meanings.
[0015] The singular forms "a," "an," and "the" include plural references unless the context
clearly dictates otherwise.
[0016] "Optional" or "optionally" means that the subsequently described event or circumstance
may or may not occur, and that the description includes instances where the event
occurs and instances where it does not.
[0017] Approximating language, as used herein throughout the specification and claims, may
be applied to modify any quantitative representation that could permissibly vary without
resulting in a change in the basic function to which it is related. Accordingly, a
value modified by a term or terms, such as "about," "approximately," and "substantially,"
are not to be limited to the precise value specified. In at least some instances,
the approximating language may correspond to the precision of an instrument for measuring
the value. Here and throughout the specification and claims, range limitations may
be combined and/or interchanged; such ranges are identified and include all the sub-ranges
contained therein unless context or language indicates otherwise.
[0018] FIG. 1 is a schematic illustration of an exemplary fiber communication system 100
in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure. System 100 includes
an optical hub 102, a fiber node 104, and an end user 106. Optical hub 102 is, for
example, a central office, a communications hub, or an optical line terminal (OLT).
In the embodiment shown, fiber node 104 is illustrated for use with a passive optical
network (PON). End user 106 is a downstream termination unit, which can represent,
for example, a customer device, customer premises (e.g., an apartment building), a
business user, or an optical network unit (ONU). In an exemplary embodiment, system
100 utilizes a coherent Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) PON architecture.
[0019] Optical hub 102 communicates with fiber node 104 by way of downstream fiber 108.
Optionally, where upstream communication is desired along system 100, optical hub
102 further connects with fiber node 104 by way of upstream fiber 110. In operation,
downstream fiber 108 and upstream fiber 110 are typically 30 km or shorter. However,
according to the embodiments presented herein, greater lengths are contemplated, such
as between 100 km and 1000 km. In an exemplary embodiment, fiber node 104 connects
with end user 106 by way of fiber optics 112. Alternatively, fiber node 104 and end
user 106 may be integrated as a single device, such as a virtualized cable modem termination
system (vCMTS), which may be located at a customer premises. Where fiber node 104
and end user 106 are separate devices, fiber optics 112 typically spans a distance
of approximately 5000 feet or less.
[0020] Optical hub 102 includes an optical frequency comb generator 114, which is configured
to receive a high quality source signal 116 from an external laser 118 and thereby
generate multiple coherent tones 120(1), 120(1'), ... 120(N), 120(N'). Optical frequency
comb generator 114 utilizes, for example, a mode-locked laser, a gain-switched laser,
or electro-optic modulation, and is constructed such that multiple coherent tones
120 are generated as simultaneous low-linewidth wavelength channels of known and controllable
spacing. This advantageous aspect of the upstream input signal into system 100 allows
a simplified architecture throughout the entire downstream portion of system 100,
as described further below.
[0021] Generated coherent tones 120 are fed into an amplifier 122, and the amplified signal
therefrom is input into a first hub optical demultiplexer 124. In an exemplary embodiment,
amplifier 122 is an erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA). Optical hub 102 further includes
a downstream transmitter 126 and a hub optical multiplexer 128. In an embodiment,
optical hub 102 optionally includes a hub optical splitter 130, an upstream receiver
132, and a second hub optical demultiplexer 134.
[0022] Downstream transmitter 126 includes a downstream optical circulator 136 and a downstream
modulator 138. In an exemplary embodiment, downstream modulator 138 is an injection
locked laser modulator. Upstream receiver 132 includes an upstream integrated coherent
receiver (ICR) 140, an upstream analog to digital converter (ADC) 142, and an upstream
digital signal processor (DSP) 144. In the exemplary embodiment, fiber node 104 includes
a node optical demultiplexer 146. In an alternative embodiment, where upstream transmission
is desired, fiber node 104 further includes a node optical multiplexer 148. In the
exemplary embodiment, node optical demultiplexer 146 and node optical multiplexer
148 are passive devices.
[0023] End user 106 further includes a downstream receiver 150. In an exemplary embodiment,
downstream receiver 150 has a similar architecture to upstream receiver 132, and includes
a downstream ICR 152, a downstream ADC 154, and a downstream DSP 156. For upstream
transmission, end user 106 optionally includes end user optical splitter 158, which
may be located within downstream receiver 150 or separately, and an upstream transmitter
160. In an exemplary embodiment, upstream transmitter 160 has a similar architecture
to downstream transmitter 126, and includes an upstream optical circulator 162, and
an upstream modulator 164.
[0024] In operation, system 100 utilizes optical frequency comb generator 114 and amplifier
122 convert the input high quality source signal 116 into multiple coherent tones
120 (e.g., 32 tones, 64 tones, etc.), which are then input to first hub optical demultiplexer
124. In an exemplary embodiment, high quality source signal 116 is of sufficient amplitude
and a narrow bandwidth such that a selected longitudinal mode of signal 116 is transmitted
into optical frequency comb generator 114 without adjacent longitudinal modes, which
are suppressed prior to processing by comb generator 114. First hub optical demultiplexer
124 then outputs a plurality of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs 166(1), 166(2),
... 166(N). That is, the generated coherent frequency tones 120 are amplified by amplifier
122 to enhance optical power, and then demultiplexed into multiple separate individual
phased synchronized coherent tone source pairs 166. For simplicity of discussion,
the following description pertains only to coherent tone pair 166(1) corresponding
to the synchronized pair signal for the first channel output, which includes a first
unmodulated signal 168 for Ch1 and a second unmodulated signal 170 for Ch 1', and
their routing through system 100.
[0025] With source signal 116 of a high quality, narrow band, and substantially within a
single longitudinal mode, coherent tone pair 166(1), including first unmodulated signal
168 (Ch1) and second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1'), is output as a high quality, narrowband
signal, which then serves as both a source of seed and local oscillator (LO) signals
for both downstream and upstream transmission and reception directions of system 100.
That is, by an exemplary configuration, the architecture of optical frequency comb
generator 114 advantageously produces high quality continuous wave (CW) signals. Specifically,
first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) may function as a downstream seed and upstream
LO throughout system 100, while second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1') concurrently
may function as an upstream seed and downstream LO for system 100.
[0026] According to the exemplary embodiment, within optical hub 102, first unmodulated
signal 168 (Ch1) is divided by hub optical splitter 130 and is separately input to
both downstream transmitter 126 and upstream receiver 132 as a "pure" signal, and
i.e., substantially low amplitude, narrow bandwidth continuous wave does not include
adhered data. First unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) thus becomes a seed signal for downstream
transmitter 126 and an LO signal for upstream receiver 132. In an exemplary embodiment,
within downstream transmitter 126, first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) passes through
downstream optical circulator 136 into downstream modulator 138, in which one or more
laser diodes (not shown in FIG. 1, described below with respect to FIGS. 2-5) are
excited, and adhere data (also not shown in FIG. 1, described below with respect to
FIGS. 2-5) to the signal that then exits downstream optical circulator 136 as downstream
modulated data stream 172 (Ch1).
[0027] In an exemplary embodiment, downstream optical circulator 136 is within downstream
transmitter 126. Alternatively, downstream optical circulator 136 may be physically
located separately from downstream transmitter 126, or else within the confines of
downstream modulator 138. Downstream modulated data stream 172 (Ch1) is then combined
in hub optical multiplexer 128 with the plurality of modulated/unmodulated data stream
pairs from other channels (not shown) and transmitted over downstream fiber 108, to
a node optical demultiplexer 174 in fiber node 104, which then separates the different
channel stream pairs for transmission to different respective end users 106. At end
user 106, because the data stream pair 170, 172 entering downstream receiver 150 is
a phase synchronized, digital signal processing at downstream DSP 156 is greatly simplified,
as described below with respect to FIG. 7.
[0028] Where upstream reception is optionally sought at optical hub 102, second unmodulated
signal 170 (Ch1') is divided, within end user 106, by end user optical splitter 158
and is separately input to both downstream receiver 150 and upstream transmitter 160
as a "pure" unmodulated signal for Ch1'. In this alternative embodiment, second unmodulated
signal 170 (Ch1') thus functions a seed signal for upstream transmitter 160 and a
"pseudo LO signal" for downstream receiver 150 for the coherent detection of Ch1.
For purposes of this discussion, second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1') is referred
to as a "pseudo LO signal" because it uses an LO signal from a remote source (output
from first hub optical demultiplexer 124), and is not required to produce an LO signal
locally at end user 106. This particular configuration further significantly reduces
cost and complexity of the architecture of the system 100 by the reduction of necessary
electronic components.
[0029] For upstream transmission, in an exemplary embodiment, a similar coherent detection
scheme is implemented for upstream transmitter 160 as is utilized for downstream transmitter
126. That is, second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1') is input to upstream optical circulator
162 and modulated by upstream modulator 164 to adhere symmetric or asymmetric data
(not shown, described below with respect to FIG. 6) utilizing one or more slave lasers
(also not shown, described below with respect to FIG. 6), and then output as an upstream
modulated data stream 176 (Ch1'), which is then combined with similar modulated data
streams from other channels (not shown) by a node multiplexer 178 in fiber node 104.
Second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1') is then transmitted upstream over upstream fiber
110, separated from other channel signals by second hub optical demultiplexer 134,
an input to upstream receiver 132, for simplified digital signal processing similar
to the process described above with respect to downstream receiver 150.
[0030] By this exemplary configuration, multiple upstream channels from different end users
106 can be multiplexed at fiber node 104 (or a remote node) and sent back to optical
hub 102. Thus, within optical hub 102, the same coherent detection scheme may be used
at upstream receiver 132 as is used with downstream receiver 150, except that upstream
receiver 132 utilizes first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) as the LO and upstream modulated
data stream 176 (Ch1') to carry data, whereas downstream receiver 150 utilizes the
data stream pair (Ch1, Ch1') in reverse. That is, downstream receiver 150 utilizes
second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1') as the LO and downstream modulated data stream
172 (Ch1) to carry data.
[0031] Implementation of the embodiments described herein are useful for migrating hybrid
fiber-coaxial (HFC) architectures towards other types of fiber architectures, as well
as deeper fiber architectures. Typical HFC architectures tend to have very few fiber
strands available from fiber node to hub (e.g. fibers 108, 110), but many fiber strands
could be deployed to cover the shorter distances that are typical from legacy HFC
nodes to end users (e.g., fiber optics 112). In the exemplary embodiments described
herein, two fibers (i.e., fibers 108, 110) are illustrated between optical hub 102
and fiber node 104, which can be a legacy HFC fiber node. That is, one fiber (i.e.,
downstream fiber 108) is utilized for downstream signal and upstream seed/downstream
LO, and another fiber (i.e., upstream fiber 110) is utilized for upstream signal.
Additionally, three fibers (i.e., fiber optics 112A-C) are illustrated for each end
user from fiber node 104 (e.g., legacy HFC fiber node) to end user 106. By utilization
of the advantageous configurations herein, fiber deeper or all-fiber migration schemes
can utilize an HFC fiber node as an optical fiber distribution node, thereby greatly
minimizing the need for fiber retrenching from an HFC node to an optical hub.
[0032] The architecture described herein, by avoiding the need for conventional compensation
hardware, can therefore be structured as a significantly less expensive and more compact
physical device than conventional devices. This novel and advantageous system and
subsystem arrangement allows for multi-wavelength emission with simplicity, reliability,
and low cost. Implementation of optical frequency comb generator 114, with high quality
input source signal 116, further allows simultaneous control of multiple sources that
are not realized by conventional discrete lasers. According to the embodiments herein,
channel spacing, for example, may be 25GHz, 12.5GHz, or 6.25GHz, based on available
signal bandwidth occupancy.
[0033] The embodiments described herein realize still further advantages by utilizing a
comb generator (i.e., optical frequency comb generator 114) that maintains a constant
wavelength spacing, thereby avoiding optical beat interference (OBI) that may be prevalent
in cases with simultaneous transmissions over a single fiber. In the exemplary embodiment
illustrated in FIG. 1, fiber node 104 is shown as a passive system, and is thus expected
to maintain a higher reliability than other migration approaches. Nevertheless, one
of ordinary skill in the art, after reading and comprehending present application,
will understand how the embodiments disclosed herein may also be adapted to a remote
PHY solution, or to a remote cable modem termination system (CMTS) that is included
in the fiber node.
[0034] As illustrated and described herein, system 100 may utilize an architecture of coherent
DWDM-PON incorporate novel solutions to meet the unique requirements of access environment,
but with cost-efficient structures not seen in conventional hardware systems. Optical
frequency comb generator 114 produces a plurality of simultaneous narrow width wavelength
channels with controlled spacing, thereby allowing simplified tuning of the entire
wavelength comb. This centralized comb light source in optical hub 102 therefore provides
master seeding sources and LO signals for both downstream and upstream directions
in heterodyne detection configurations in order to reuse the optical sources throughout
the entirety of system 100. This advantageous configuration realizes significant cost
savings and reduction in hardware complexity over intradyne detection schemes in long-haul
systems, for example.
[0035] FIG. 2 is a schematic illustration depicting an exemplary downstream transmitter
200 that can be utilized with fiber communication system 100, depicted in FIG. 1.
Downstream transmitter 200 includes downstream optical circulator 136 (see FIG. 1,
above) in two-way communication with a laser injected modulator 202, which includes
a laser diode 204, which receives data 206 from an external data source 208. In an
alternative embodiment, downstream transmitter 200 may include two separate fiber
receivers (not shown), which would substitute, and eliminate the need, for downstream
optical circulator 136 in the structural configuration shown.
[0036] In operation, downstream transmitter 200 performs the same general functions as downstream
transmitter 126 (FIG. 1, described above). Laser injected modulator 202 utilizes laser
diode 204 as a "slave laser." That is, laser diode 204 is injection locked by external
laser 118, which functions as a single frequency or longitudinal mode master, or seed,
laser to keep the frequency of a resonator mode of laser diode 204 close enough to
the frequency of the master laser (i.e., laser 118) to allow for frequency locking.
The principle of downstream transmitter 200 is also referred to as "laser cloning,"
where a single high quality master laser (i.e., laser 118) transmits a narrow bandwidth,
low noise signal (i.e., source signal 116), and a relatively inexpensive slave laser
(e.g., laser diode 204) can be used throughout system 100 to transmit data modulated
signals, such as downstream modulated data stream 172 (Ch1). In an exemplary embodiment,
laser diode 204 is a Fabry Perot laser diode (FP LD), or a vertical-cavity surface-emitting
laser (VCSEL), in comparison with the considerably more expensive distributed feedback
laser diodes (DFB LD) that are conventionally used. In an alternative embodiment,
laser diode 204 is an LED, which can perform as a sufficient slave laser source according
to the embodiments herein due to the utilization of the high quality source signal
116 that is consistently utilized throughout system 100.
[0037] More specifically, first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) exiting hub optical splitter
130 is input to downstream optical circulator 136, which then excites laser diode
204, that is, laser diode 204 emits light at a specified modulation rate. Laser injected
modulator 202 adheres data 206 to the excited Ch1 signal, and the resultant modulated
Ch1 signal with adhered data is output from downstream optical circulator 136 as downstream
modulated data stream 172 (Ch1). According to this exemplary embodiment, first unmodulated
signal 168 (Ch1) is input to downstream transmitter 126 as an unmodulated, low amplitude,
narrow bandwidth, low noise "pure" source, and is modulated by laser diode 204, which
is a high amplitude, wide bandwidth device, and resultant downstream modulated data
stream 172 (Ch1) is a high amplitude, narrow bandwidth, low noise "pure" signal that
can be transmitted throughout system 100 without the need for further conventional
compensation means (hardware and programming). Suppression of adjacent longitudinal
modes from laser diode 204, for example, is not necessary because of the exciting
source signal (i.e., signal 168) is of such high quality and narrow bandwidth that
output downstream modulated data stream 172 (Ch1) is substantially amplified only
within the narrow bandwidth of external laser 118. In the exemplary embodiment illustrated
in FIG. 2, laser injected modulator 202 implements direct modulation.
[0038] Optical injection locking as described herein thus improves upon the performance
of the relatively less expensive, multi-longitudinal slave laser source (i.e., laser
diode 204) in terms of spectral bandwidth and noise properties. With respect to heterodyne
coherent detection, incoming signals (upstream or downstream) can be combined with
the LO or pseudo-LO and brought to an intermediate frequency (IF) for electronic processing.
According to this exemplary configuration, part of the LO/pseudo-LO optical power
can also be employed as the master/seed laser for the reverse transmission direction,
at both optical hub 102, and at end user 106 (described below with respect to FIG.
6), and thus a fully coherent system having a master seed and LO delivery from an
optical hub can be achieved in a relatively cost-effective manner comparison with
conventional systems.
[0039] FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration depicting an alternative downstream transmitter
300 that can be utilized with fiber communication system 100, depicted in FIG. 1.
Downstream transmitter 300 is similar to downstream transmitter 200 (FIG. 2), including
the implementation of direct modulation, except that downstream transmitter 300 alternatively
utilizes polarization division multiplexing to modulate the Ch1 signal into downstream
modulated data stream 172 (Ch1).
[0040] Downstream transmitter 300 includes downstream optical circulator 136 (see FIG. 1,
above) in two-way communication with a laser injected modulator 302, which includes
a polarization beam splitter (PBS)/polarization beam combiner (PBC) 304, which can
be a single device. Laser injected modulator 302 further includes a first laser diode
306 configured to receive first data 308 from an external data source (not shown in
FIG. 3), and a second laser diode 310 configured to receive second data 312 from the
same, or different, external data source.
[0041] In operation, downstream transmitter 300 is similar to downstream transmitter 200
with respect to the implementation of direct modulation, and master/slave laser injection
locking. Downstream transmitter 300 though, alternatively implements dual-polarization
from the splitter portion of PBS/PBC 304, which splits first unmodulated signal 168
(Ch1) into its x-polarization component P1 and y-polarization component P2, which
separately excite first laser diode 306 and second laser diode 310, respectively.
Similar to downstream transmitter 200 (FIG. 2), in downstream transmitter 300, first
unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) exiting hub optical splitter 130 is input to downstream
optical circulator 136, the separate polarization components of which then excite
laser diodes 306, 310, respectively, at the specified modulation rate. Laser injected
modulator 302 adheres data first and second data 308, 312 to the respective excited
polarization components of the Ch1 signal, which are combined by the combiner portion
of PBS/PBC 304. The resultant modulated Ch1 signal with adhered data is output from
downstream optical circulator 136 as downstream modulated data stream 172 (Ch1).
[0042] In an exemplary embodiment, the polarized light components received by first and
second laser diodes 306, 310 are orthogonal (90 degrees and/or noninteractive). That
is, first laser diode 306 and second laser diode 310 are optimized as slave lasers
to lock onto the same wavelength as external laser 118 (master), but with perpendicular
polarization directions. By this configuration, large data packets (e.g., first data
308 and second data 312) can be split and simultaneously sent along separate pathways
before recombination as downstream modulated data stream 172 (Ch1). Alternatively,
first data 308 and second data 312 may come from two (or more) separate unrelated
sources. The orthogonal split prevents data interference between the polarized signal
components. However, one of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that, according
to the embodiment of FIG. 3, first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) can also be polarized
at 60 degrees, utilizing similar principles of amplitude and phase, as well as wavelength
division. First unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) can alternatively be multiplexed according
to a spiral or vortex polarization, or orbital angular momentum. Additionally, whereas
the illustrated embodiment features polarization multiplexing, space division multiplexing
and mode division multiplexing may be also alternatively implemented.
[0043] According to this exemplary embodiment, master continuous wave signal for Ch1, namely,
first unmodulated signal 168, is received from optical frequency comb generator 114
and is split to be used, in the first part, as the LO for upstream receiver 132, and
in the second part, to synchronize two slave lasers (i.e., first laser diode 306 and
second laser diode 310) by the respective x-polarization and y-polarization light
portions such that both slave lasers oscillate according to the wavelength of the
master laser (i.e., external laser 118). Data (i.e., first data 308 and second data
312) is directly modulated onto the two slave lasers, respectively. This injection
locking technique thus further allows for frequency modulation (FM) noise spectrum
control from the master laser to the slave laser, and is further able to realize significant
improvements in FM noise/phase jitter suppression and emission linewidth reduction.
[0044] As described herein, utilization of optical injection with a dual-polarization optical
transmitter (i.e., downstream transmitter 300) by direct modulation may advantageously
implement relatively lower-cost lasers to perform the functions of conventional lasers
that are considerably more costly. According to this configuration of a dual-polarization
optical transmitter by direct modulation of semiconductor laser together with coherent
detection, the present embodiments are particular useful for short-reach applications
in terms of its lower cost and architectural compactness. Similar advantages may be
realized for long reach applications.
[0045] FIG. 4 is a schematic illustration depicting an alternative downstream transmitter
400 that can be utilized with fiber communication system 100, depicted in FIG. 1.
Downstream transmitter 400 is similar to downstream transmitter 200 (FIG. 2), except
that downstream transmitter 400 alternatively implements external modulation, as opposed
to direct modulation, to modulate the Ch1 signal into downstream modulated data stream
172 (Ch1). Downstream transmitter 400 includes downstream optical circulator 136 (see
FIG. 1, above) and a laser injected modulator 402. Downstream optical circulator 136
is in one-way direct communication with a separate external optical circulator 404
that may be contained within laser injected modulator 402 or separate. Laser injected
modulator 402 further includes a laser diode 406, which receives the low amplitude,
narrow bandwidth, first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) and emits an excited, high amplitude,
narrow bandwidth, optical signal 408 back to external optical circulator 404. Laser
injected modulator 402 still further includes an external modulating element 410,
which receives data 412 from an external data source 414, and adheres data 412 with
optical signal 408 to be unidirectionally received back by downstream optical circulator
136 and output as downstream modulated data stream 172 (Ch1).
[0046] In this exemplary embodiment, downstream transmitter 400 performs the same general
functions as downstream transmitter 126 (FIG. 1, described above), but uses external
modulation as the injection locking mechanism to lock laser diode 406 to the wavelength
of the master laser source (e.g., external laser 118). To implement external modulation,
this embodiment regulates optical signal flow through mostly unidirectional optical
circulators (i.e., downstream optical circulator 136, external optical circulator
404). External modulating element 410 may optionally include a demultiplexing filter
(not shown) as an integral component, or separately along the signal path of downstream
modulated data stream 172 (Ch1) prior to input by downstream receiver 150. In an exemplary
embodiment, external modulating element 410 is a monitor photodiode, and injection
locking is performed through a rear laser facet.
[0047] FIG. 5 is a schematic illustration depicting an alternative downstream 500 transmitter
that can be utilized with fiber communication system 100, depicted in FIG. 1. Downstream
transmitter 500 is similar to downstream transmitter 300 (FIG. 3), including the implementation
of direct modulation and polarization division multiplexing, except that downstream
transmitter 500 further implements quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) to modulate
the Ch1 signal into downstream modulated data stream 172 (Ch1). That is, further external
modulating elements may be utilized per polarization branch (FIG. 2, above) to generate
QAM signals.
[0048] Downstream transmitter 500 includes downstream optical circulator 136 (see FIG. 1,
above) in two-way communication with a laser injected modulator 502, which includes
a PBS/PBC 504, which can be a single device or two separate devices. Additionally,
all of the components of laser injected modulator 502 may themselves be separate devices,
or alternatively all contained within a single photonic chip. Laser injected modulator
502 further includes a first laser diode 506 configured to receive first data 508
from an external data source (not shown in FIG. 5), a second laser diode 510 configured
to receive second data 512 from the same, or different, external data source, a third
laser diode 514 configured to receive third data 516 from the same/different, external
data source, and a fourth laser diode 518 configured to receive fourth data 520 from
the same/different external data source.
[0049] In operation, downstream transmitter 500 implements dual-polarization from the splitter
portion of PBS/PBC 504, which splits first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) into its x-polarization
component (P1) and y-polarization component (P2). Each polarization component P1,
P2 is then input to first non-polarized optical splitter/combiner 522 and second non-polarized
optical splitter/combiner 524, respectively. First and second optical splitters/combiners
522, 524 each then further split their respective polarization components P1, P2 into
their I-signals 526, 528, respectively, and also into their Q-signals 530, 532, respectively.
Generated I-signals 526, 528 then directly excite laser diodes 506, 514, respectively.
Before directly communicating with laser diodes 510, 518, respectively, generated
Q-signals 530, 532 first pass through first and second quadrature phase shift elements
534, 536, respectively, each of which shifts the Q-signal by 45 degrees in each direction,
such that the respective Q-signal is offset by 90 degrees from its respective I-signal
when recombined at splitters/combiners 522, 524.
[0050] The resultant modulated Ch1 signal, with adhered data, is output from downstream
optical circulator 136 of downstream transmitter 500 as downstream modulated data
stream 172 (Ch1), and as a polarized, multiplexed QAM signal. According to this exemplary
embodiment, utilization of a photonic integrated circuit allows for directly modulated
polarization of a multiplexed coherent system, but utilizing significantly lower cost
hardware configurations than are realized by conventional architectures. In an exemplary
embodiment, laser diodes 506, 510, 514, 516 are PAM-4 modulated laser diodes capable
of generating 16-QAM polarization multiplexed signals.
[0051] FIG. 6 is a schematic illustration depicting an exemplary upstream transmitter 600
that can be utilized with the fiber communication system 100, depicted in FIG. 1.
In the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 6, upstream transmitter 600 is similar to downstream
transmitter 300 (FIG. 3) in structure and function. Specifically, upstream transmitter
600 includes upstream optical circulator 162 (see FIG. 1, above) in two-way communication
with a laser injected modulator 602 (not separately illustrated in FIG. 6), which
includes a PBS/PBC 604, which can be a single device or separate devices. Laser injected
modulator 602 further includes a first laser diode 606 configured to receive first
data 608 from an external data source (not shown in FIG. 6), and a second laser diode
610 configured to receive second data 612 from the same, or different, external data
source. Similar to the embodiments of FIGS. 2-5, above, downstream transmitter 600
may also eliminate for upstream optical circulator 162 by the utilization of at least
two separate fiber receivers (not shown).
[0052] Upstream transmitter 600 is thus nearly identical to downstream transmitter 300 (FIG.
3), except that upstream transmitter 600 utilizes second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1')
as the end user seed source, in laser injected modulator 602, to combine or adhere
with data (e.g., first data 608, second data 612) to generate upstream modulated data
stream 176 (Ch1') to carry upstream data signals to an upstream receiver (e.g., upstream
receiver 132). In operation, first laser diode 606 and second laser diode 610 also
function as slave lasers by injection locking to the master signal from external laser
118. That is, symmetric or asymmetric data for Ch1' (e.g., first data 608, second
data 612) is modulated onto the two slave lasers (i.e., first laser diode 606 and
second laser diode 610) with polarization multiplexing, much the same as the process
implemented with respect to downstream transmitter 300 (FIG. 3) in optical hub 102.
[0053] In this example, upstream transmitter 600 is illustrated to substantially mimic the
architecture of downstream transmitter 300 (FIG. 3). Alternatively, upstream transmitter
600 could equivalently mimic the architecture of one or more of downstream transmitters
200 (FIG. 2), 400 (FIG. 4), or 500 (FIG. 5) without departing from the scope of the
present disclosure. Furthermore, upstream transmitter 600 can conform to any of the
embodiments disclosed by FIGS. 2-5, irrespective of the specific architecture of the
particular downstream transmitter utilized within optical hub 102. By utilization
of high-quality, narrow bandwidth, low noise external laser source 118, the master/slave
laser relationship carries through the entirety of system 100, and the plurality of
end users 106 that receive modulated/unmodulated signal pairs (which may be 32, 64,
128, or as many as 256 from a single fiber line pair, e.g., downstream fiber 108 and
upstream fiber 110).
[0054] The significant cost savings according to the present embodiments are thus best realized
when considering that as many as 512 downstream transmitters (e.g., downstream transmitter
126, FIG. 1) and upstream transmitters (e.g., upstream transmitter 160, FIG. 1) may
be necessary to fully implement all available chattel pairs from a single optical
hub 102. The present embodiments implement a significantly lower cost and less complex
hardware architecture to utilize the benefits accruing from implementation of high-quality
external laser 118, without having to add expensive single longitudinal mode laser
diodes, or other compensation hardware necessary to suppress adjacent longitudinal
modes from inexpensive lasers or the noise components produced thereby.
[0055] FIG. 7 is a schematic illustration depicting an exemplary processing architecture
which can be implemented for upstream receiver 132, downstream receiver 150, and fiber
communication system 100, depicted in FIG. 1. The respective architectures of upstream
receiver 132 and downstream receiver 150 are similar with respect to form and function
(described above with respect to FIG. 1), except that upstream receiver 132 receives
a first data stream pair 700 for Ch1, Ch1', in reverse of a second data stream pair
702, which is received by downstream receiver 150. In other words, as described above,
first data stream pair 700 includes first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) as the LO and
upstream modulated data stream 176 (Ch1') to carry data, whereas second data stream
pair 702 includes unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1') as the LO and downstream modulated
data stream 172 (Ch1) to carry data.
[0056] First and second data stream pairs 700, 702 the multiplexed phase synchronized pairs
modulated/unmodulated of optical signals that are converted into analog electrical
signals by ICR 140 and ICR 152, respectively. The respective analog signals are then
converted into digital domain by ADC 142 and ADC 154, for digital signal processing
by DSP 144 and DSP 156. In an exemplary embodiment, digital signal processing may
be performed by a CMOS ASIC employing very large quantities of gate arrays. A conventional
CMOS ASIC, for example, can utilize as many as 70 million gates to process incoming
digitized data streams. In the conventional systems, modulated data streams for Ch1
and Ch1' are processed independently, which requires significant resources to estimate
frequency offset, drift, and digital down conversion compensation factors (e.g., e^-jωt,
where ω represents the frequency difference between first unmodulated signal 168 and
upstream modulated data stream 176, and ω is held constant for coherent tone pair
166, as extended throughout system 100).
[0057] According to the exemplary embodiments disclosed herein, on the other hand, the modulated
and unmodulated signals from Ch1 and Ch1' are phase synchronized together such that
the difference between ω of the signal pair is always known, and phase synchronized
to maintain a constant relationship. In contrast, conventional systems are required
to constantly estimate the carrier phase to compensate for factors such as draft which
requires considerable processing resources, as discussed above. According to the present
embodiments though, since Ch1 and Ch1' are synchronized together as first and second
data stream pairs 700, 702, the offset ω between the pairs 700, 702 need not be estimated,
since it may be instead easily derived by a simplified subtraction process in DSP
144 and DSP 156 because the signal pairs will drift together by the same amount in
a constant relationship. By this advantageous configuration and process, digital signal
processing by a CMOS ASIC can be performed utilizing as few as one million gates,
thereby greatly improving the processing speed of the respective DSP, and/or reducing
the number of physical chips required to perform the processing (or similarly increasing
the amount of separate processing that may be performed by the same chip). At present,
implementation of the embodiments described herein may improve downstream and upstream
data transmission speeds by as much as 5000 times faster than conventional systems.
[0058] FIG. 8 is a flow chart diagram of an exemplary downstream optical network process
800 that can be implemented with fiber communication system 100, depicted in FIG.
1. Process 800 begins at step 802. In step 802, coherent tone pairs 166 are generated
and output by optical frequency comb generator 114, amplifier 122, and first hub optical
demultiplexer 124. Similar to the discussion above, for simplification purposes, the
following discussion addresses specific coherent tone pair 166(1) for Ch1, Ch1'. Coherent
tone pair 166 includes first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) and second unmodulated signal
170 (Ch1'). Once coherent tone pair 166 is generated, process 800 proceeds from step
802 to steps 804 and 806, which may be performed together or simultaneously.
[0059] In step 804, first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) is input to an optical splitter,
e.g., optical splitter 130, FIG. 1. In step 806, second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1')
is transmitted to a multiplexer, e.g., hub optical multiplexer 128, FIG. 1. Referring
back to step 804, first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) is split to function both as
an LO for upstream detection, and as a seed for downstream data transmission. For
upstream detection, step 804 proceeds to step 808, where first unmodulated signal
168 (Ch1) is received by an upstream receiver, i.e., upstream receiver 132, FIG. 1.
For downstream data transmission, step 804 separately and simultaneously proceeds
to step 810.
[0060] Step 810 is an optional step, where polarization division multiplexing is desired.
In step 810, first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) is split into its x-component and
y-component parts P1, P2, respectively (e.g., by PBS/PBC 304, FIG. 3 or PBS/PBC 504,
FIG. 5) for separate direct or external modulation. Where polarization division multiplexing
is not utilized, process 800 skips step 810, and instead proceeds directly from step
804 to step 812. In step 812, first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1), or its polarized
components if optional step 810 is implemented, is modulated by direct (e.g., FIGS.
2, 3, 5) or external (e.g., FIG. 4) modulation. Process 800 then proceeds from step
812 to step 814. Step 814 is an optional step, which is implemented if optional step
810 is also implemented for polarization division multiplexing. In step 814, the x-component
and y-component parts P1, P2 are recombined (e.g., by PBS/PBC 304, FIG. 3 or PBS/PBC
504, FIG. 5) for output as downstream modulated data stream 172 (Ch1). Where polarization
division multiplexing was not utilized, process 800 skips step 814, and instead proceeds
directly from step 812 to step 816.
[0061] In step 816, second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1') and downstream modulated data stream
172 (Ch1) are optically multiplexed, i.e., by hub optical multiplexer 128, FIG. 1,
as a phase synchronized data stream pair (e.g., second data stream pair 702, FIG.
7). Process 800 then proceeds from step 816 to step 818, where the phase synchronized
data stream pair is transmitted over an optical fiber, i.e., downstream fiber 108,
FIG. 1. Process 800 then proceeds from step 818 to step 820, where the synchronized
data stream pair is optically demultiplexed, e.g., by node optical demultiplexer 174
in fiber node 104. Process 800 then proceeds from step 820 to step 822, where both
components of the demultiplexed data stream pair (e.g., second unmodulated signal
170 (Ch1') and downstream modulated data stream 172 (Ch1)) are received by a downstream
receiver (e.g., downstream receiver 150, FIG. 1) for heterodyne coherent detection.
[0062] Where an end user (e.g., end user 106) further includes upstream transmission capability,
process 800 further includes optional steps 824 and 826. In step 824, and prior to
downstream reception in step 822, second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1') is optically
split (e.g., by end user optical splitter 158, FIG. 1), and additionally transmitted,
in step 826, to an upstream transmitter of the end user (e.g., upstream transmitter
160, FIG. 1) as a seed signal for a modulator (e.g., modulator 164, FIG. 1) for upstream
data transmission, as explained further below with respect to FIG. 9.
[0063] FIG. 9 is a flow chart diagram of an exemplary upstream optical network process 900
that can be optionally implemented with fiber communication system 100, depicted in
FIG. 1. Process 900 begins at optional step 902. In step 902, where polarization division
multiplexing is utilized in the upstream transmitter (e.g., upstream transmitter 160,
FIG. 1), second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1') (from step 826, FIG. 8) is split into
its x-component and y-component parts (e.g., by PBS/PBC 604, FIG. 6) for separate
direct or external modulation. Where polarization division multiplexing is not utilized,
step 902 is skipped, and process 900 instead begins at step 904.
[0064] In step 904, second unmodulated signal 170 (Ch1'), or its polarized components if
optional step 902 is implemented, is injection locked to the master source laser (e.g.,
external laser 118, FIG. 1), as described above with respect to FIGS. 1 and 6. Step
904 then proceeds to step 906, where injection locked signal is modulated by direct
or external modulation. Process 900 then proceeds from step 906 to step 908. Step
908 is an optional step, which is implemented if optional step 902 is also implemented
for polarization division multiplexing. In step 908, the x-component and y-component
parts of the excited Ch1' signal are recombined (e.g., by PBS/PBC 604, FIG. 6) for
output as upstream modulated data stream 176 (Ch1'). Where polarization division multiplexing
was not utilized, process 900 skips step 908, and instead proceeds directly from step
906 to step 910.
[0065] In step 910, upstream modulated data stream 176 (Ch1') is optically multiplexed,
i.e., by node optical multiplexer 178, FIG. 1, with other upstream data stream signals
(not shown). Process 900 then proceeds from step 910 to step 912, where upstream modulated
data stream 176 (Ch1') is transmitted over an optical fiber, i.e., upstream fiber
110, FIG. 1. Process 900 then proceeds from step 912 to step 914, where upstream modulated
data stream 176 (Ch1') is optically demultiplexed, e.g., by second hub optical demultiplexer
134, which separates the selected data stream from the other upstream data stream
signals, for transmission to a particular upstream receiver tuned to receive the modulated
data stream. Process 900 then proceeds from step 914 to step 916, where both components
(e.g., first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1), FIG. 8, and upstream modulated data stream
176 (Ch1')) of the upstream data stream pair, e.g., first data stream pair 700, FIG.
7, are received by an upstream receiver (e.g., upstream receiver and 32, FIG. 1) for
heterodyne coherent detection.
[0066] As illustrated in the exemplary embodiment, a difference between upstream and downstream
signal transmission is that an entire synchronized modulated/unmodulated channel pair
(e.g., second data stream pair 702, FIG. 7) can be transmitted in the downstream direction,
whereas, in the upstream direction, only a data modulated signal (e.g., upstream modulated
data stream 176 (Ch1')) to be transmitted over the upstream fiber connection, i.e.,
upstream fiber 110. An advantage of the present configuration is that the LO for upstream
coherent detection (e.g., at upstream receiver 132, FIG. 1) comes directly from the
split signal, i.e., first unmodulated signal 168 (Ch1) generated from optical frequency
comb generator 114 within optical hub 102, after separation by first hub optical demultiplexer
124, as depicted in FIG. 1. Conventional systems typically require LO generation at
each stage of the respective system. According to the present disclosure, on the other
hand, relatively inexpensive slave lasers can be implemented throughout the system
architecture for modulation and polarization multiplexing in both optical hub 102
and end user 106 components, without requiring an additional LO source at the end
user.
[0067] According to the present disclosure, utilization of dual-polarization optical transmitters,
and by direct modulation of semiconductor lasers with coherent detection, is particularly
beneficial for not only longhaul applications, but also for shortreach applications
to reduce the cost of electronic hardware, while also rendering the overall network
system architecture more compact. The present systems and methods further solve the
conventional problem of synchronizing two laser sources over a long period of time.
Utilization of the phase synchronized data stream pairs and slave lasers herein allows
continual synchronization of the various laser sources throughout the system during
its entire operation. These solutions can be implemented within coherent DWDM-PON
system architectures for access networks in a cost-efficient manner.
[0068] Utilization of the high quality optical comb source at the front end of the system
thus further allows a plurality of simultaneous narrow bandwidth wavelength channels
to be generated with easily controlled spacing, and therefore also simplified tuning
of the entire wavelength comb. This centralized comb light source in the optical hub
provides master seeding sources and LO signals that can be reused throughout the system,
and for both downstream and upstream transmission. The implementation of optical injection,
as described herein, further improves the performance of low-cost multi-longitudinal
slave laser sources in terms of spectral bandwidth and noise properties. Access networks
according to the present systems and methods thus achieve more efficient transmission
of wavelengths through optical fibers, thereby increasing the capacity of transmitted
data, but at lower power, increased sensitivity, lower hardware cost, and a reduction
in dispersion, DSP compensation, and error correction.
[0069] Exemplary embodiments of fiber communication systems and methods are described above
in detail. The systems and methods of this disclosure though, are not limited to only
the specific embodiments described herein, but rather, the components and/or steps
of their implementation may be utilized independently and separately from other components
and/or steps described herein. Additionally, the exemplary embodiments can be implemented
and utilized in connection with other access networks utilizing fiber and coaxial
transmission at the end user stage.
[0070] This written description uses examples to disclose the embodiments, including the
best mode, and also to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the embodiments,
including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated
methods. The patentable scope of the disclosure is defined by the claims, and may
include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples
are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have structural elements
that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they include equivalent
structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal language of the
claims.
[0071] Although specific features of various embodiments of the disclosure may be shown
in some drawings and not in others, this is for convenience only. In accordance with
the principles of the disclosure, a particular feature shown in a drawing may be referenced
and/or claimed in combination with features of the other drawings. For example, the
following list of example claims represents only some of the potential combinations
of elements possible from the systems and methods described herein.
a(i). An injection locked transmitter for an optical communication network, comprising:
a master seed laser source input substantially confined to a single longitudinal mode;
an input data stream; and a laser injected modulator including at least one slave
laser having a resonator frequency being injection locked to a frequency of the single
longitudinal mode of the master seed laser source, wherein the laser injected modulator
is configured to receive the master seed laser source input and the input data stream,
and output a laser modulated data stream.
b(i). The transmitter of claim a(i), wherein the laser injected modulator is configured
to implement direct modulation.
c(i). The transmitter of claim a(i), wherein the laser injected modulator is configured
to implement external modulation.
d(i). The transmitter of claim a(i), wherein the at least one slave laser comprises
at least one of an LED, a Fabry Perot laser diode, and a vertical-cavity surface-emitting
laser.
e(i). The transmitter of claim a(i), further comprising a first optical circulator
in communication with the laser injected modulator and the master seed laser source
input.
f(i). The transmitter of claim e(i), wherein the laser injected modulator is configured
to implement one of polarization division multiplexing, space division multiplexing,
and mode division multiplexing.
g(i). The transmitter of claim f(i), wherein the laser injected modulator is configured
to multiplex the master seed laser source input at one of a 90 degree polarization,
a 60 degree polarization, a 90 degree polarization, a spiral polarization, a circular
polarization, a vortex polarization, or an orbital angular momentum.
h(i). The transmitter of claim f(i), further comprising a polarization beam splitter
and a polarization beam combiner disposed between the first optical circulator and
the at least one slave laser.
i(i). The transmitter of claim h(i), wherein the at least one slave laser comprises
a first laser diode and a second laser diode, wherein the first laser diode is configured
to receive an x-component of the master seed laser source input, and wherein the second
laser diode is configured to receive a y-component of the master seed laser source
input.
j(i). The transmitter of claim i(i), further comprising: a first optical splitter
and optical combiner disposed between the polarization beam splitter and the first
laser diode; and a second optical splitter and optical combiner disposed between the
polarization beam splitter and the second laser diode, wherein the first laser diode
comprises a first sub-laser and a second sub-laser, wherein the second laser diode
comprises a third sub-laser and a fourth sub-laser, wherein the first sub-laser is
configured to receive an I-signal of the x-component, wherein the second sub-laser
is configured to receive a Q-signal of the x-component, wherein the third sub-laser
is configured to receive an I-signal of the y-component, wherein the fourth sub-laser
is configured to receive a Q-signal of the y-component.
k(i). The transmitter of claim j(i), further comprising: a first phase shift element
disposed between the first optical splitter and the second sub-laser; and a second
phase shift element disposed between the second optical splitter and the fourth sub-laser.
l(i). The transmitter of claim e(i), further comprising: a second optical circulator
in one-way communication with the first optical circulator and in two-way communication
with the at least one slave laser; and an external modulation element disposed between
the first optical circulator and the second optical circulator, wherein the external
modulation element is configured to receive the input data stream and an output of
the second optical circulator, wherein the first optical circulator is in one-way
communication with an output of the external modulation element.
a(ii). An optical network communication system, comprising: an input signal source;
an optical frequency comb generator configured to receive the input signal source
and output a plurality of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs, each of the plurality
of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs including a first unmodulated signal and
a second unmodulated signal, a first transmitter configured to receive the first unmodulated
signal of a selected one of the plurality of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs
as a seed source and to output a first modulated data stream; and a first receiver
configured to receive the first modulated data stream from the first transmitter and
receive the second unmodulated signal of the selected one of the plurality of phase
synchronized coherent tone pairs as a local oscillator source.
b(ii). The system of claim a(ii), wherein the optical frequency comb generator comprises
an amplifier and an optical demultiplexer.
c(ii). The system of claim a(ii), wherein the optical frequency comb generator is
configured to implement one of a mode-locked laser, a gain-switched laser, and electro-optical
modulation.
d(ii). The system of claim a(ii), wherein the selected one of the plurality of phase
synchronized coherent tone pairs are controllable at a constant frequency spacing
with respect to one another throughout the system.
e(ii). The system of claim a(ii), wherein the system is configured to perform heterodyne
detection.
f(ii). The system of claim a(ii), wherein the first transmitter comprises a first
laser injected modulator and a first optical circulator.
g(ii). The system of claim a(ii), wherein the first laser injected modulator is configured
to implement direct modulation.
h(ii). The system of claim a(ii), wherein the first laser injected modulator is configured
to implement external modulation.
i(ii). The system of claim g(ii), wherein the input signal source includes an external
master laser.
j(ii). The system of claim i(ii), wherein the first modulator comprises a first laser
diode configured to injection lock to the external master laser.
k(ii). The system of claim j(ii), wherein the first laser diode is configured to receive
first data from a first external data source to adhere into the output first modulated
data stream.
l(ii). The system of claim j(ii), wherein the first modulator further comprises a
first polarization beam splitter and a first polarization beam combiner.
m(ii). The system of claim l(ii), wherein the first laser diode comprises first and
second slave lasers, wherein the first and second slave lasers are configured to receive
first and second polarization components, respectively, from the first polarization
beam splitter.
n(ii). The system of claim m(ii), wherein the first modulator is configured to implement
quadrature amplitude modulation.
o(ii). The system of claim n(ii), wherein the first slave laser comprises a first
sub-laser and a second sub-laser, wherein the second slave laser comprises a third
sub-laser and a fourth sub-laser, wherein the first and second sub-lasers are configured
to receive an I-signal and a Q-signal of the first polarization component, respectively,
and wherein the third and fourth sub-lasers are configured to receive an I-signal
and a Q-signal of the second polarization component, respectively.
p(ii). The system of claim a(ii), further comprising a second transmitter configured
to receive the second unmodulated signal of the selected one of the plurality of phase
synchronized coherent tone pairs as a seed source and to output a second modulated
data stream.
q(ii). The system of claim p(ii), wherein the second transmitter is configured to
implement one of direct and external modulation.
r(ii). The system of claim p(ii), wherein the second transmitter is configured to
implement one or more of polarization division multiplexing and quadrature amplitude
modulation.
s(ii). The system of claim p(ii), further comprising a second receiver configured
to receive the second modulated data stream from the second transmitter and receive
the first unmodulated signal of the selected one of the plurality of phase synchronized
coherent tone pairs as a local oscillator source.
a(iii). An optical network communication system, comprising: an optical hub including
an optical frequency comb generator configured to output at least one phase synchronized
coherent tone pair having a first unmodulated signal and a second unmodulated signal,
and a downstream transmitter configured to receive the first unmodulated signal as
a seed source and to output a downstream modulated data stream; a fiber node; and
an end user including a downstream receiver configured to receive the downstream modulated
data stream from the downstream transmitter and receive the second unmodulated signal
as a local oscillator source.
b(iii). The system of claim a(iii), wherein the selected one of the plurality of phase
synchronized coherent tone pairs are controllable at a constant frequency spacing
with respect to one another throughout the system.
c(iii). The system of claim a(iii), wherein the optical hub further comprises an amplifier,
a first hub optical demultiplexer, and a hub optical multiplexer.
d(iii). The system of claim c(iii), wherein the fiber node comprises a node optical
demultiplexer configured to demultiplex an output from the hub optical multiplexer.
e(iii). The system of claim d(iii), wherein the hub optical multiplexer is configured
to communicate with the node optical demultiplexer by way of a downstream fiber.
f(iii). The system of claim d(iii), wherein the node optical demultiplexer is configured
to communicate with the downstream transmitter by way of first fiber optics.
g(iii). The system of claim a(iii), wherein the downstream receiver comprises a downstream
integrated coherent receiver, a downstream analog to digital converter, and a downstream
digital signal processor.
h(iii). The system of claim f(iii), wherein the end user further comprises an upstream
transmitter, wherein the fiber node further comprises a node optical multiplexer,
and wherein the optical hub further comprises a second hub optical demultiplexer and
an upstream receiver.
i(iii). The system of claim h(iii), wherein the upstream transmitter is configured
to communicate with the node optical multiplexer by way of second fiber optics, and
wherein the node optical multiplexer is configured to communicate with the second
hub optical demultiplexer by way of an upstream fiber.
j(iii). The system of claim i(iii), wherein the upstream transmitter is configured
to receive the second unmodulated signal as a seed source and to output a upstream
modulated data stream to the node optical multiplexer.
k(iii). The system of claim i(iii), wherein the upstream receiver comprises an upstream
integrated coherent receiver, an upstream analog to digital converter, and an upstream
digital signal processor.
l(iii). The system of claim i(iii), wherein the upstream receiver is configured to
receive as a data source the upstream modulated data stream from the node optical
multiplexer, and to receive from the first hub optical demultiplexer the first unmodulated
signal as a local oscillator source.
m(iii). The system of claim a(iii), wherein the at least one phase synchronized coherent
tone pair is controllable at a constant frequency spacing with respect to one another
throughout the system.
n(iii). The system of claim a(iii), wherein the end user comprises at least one of
a customer device, customer premises, a business user, and an optical network unit.
o(iii). The system of claim a(iii), further configured to implement coherent dense
wavelength division multiplexing passive optical network architecture.
p(iii). The system of claim i(iii), wherein the downstream digital signal processor
is configured to hold constant the difference in frequency separation ω between the
second unmodulated signal and the downstream modulated data stream when calculating
a digital down conversion compensation factor e^-jωt.
q(iii). The system of claim k(iii), wherein the upstream digital signal processor
is configured to hold constant the difference in frequency separation ω between the
first unmodulated signal and the upstream modulated data stream when calculating the
digital down conversion compensation factor e^-jωt.
a(iv). A method of optical network processing, comprising the steps of: generating
at least one pair of first and second unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tones;
transmitting the first unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone to a first transmitter
as a seed signal; adhering downstream data, in the first transmitter, to the first
unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone to generate a first modulated data stream
signal; optically multiplexing the first modulated data stream signal and the second
unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone together within a hub optical multiplexer;
and communicating the multiplexed first modulated data stream signal and the second
unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone to a first receiver, by way of fiber
optics, for downstream heterodyne detection.
b(iv). The method of claim a(iv), further comprising, prior to the step of adhering
downstream data, the step of polarization beam splitting the first unmodulated phase
synchronized coherent tone.
c(iv). The method of claim b(iv), further comprising, after the step of adhering downstream
data, and prior to the step of optically multiplexing, the step of polarization beam
combining split components from the step of polarization beam splitting of the first
unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone.
d(iv). The method of claim a(iv), wherein the step of adhering downstream data implements
injection locking.
e(iv). The method of claim a(iv), further comprising the steps of: optically splitting,
prior to the step of communicating, the second unmodulated phase synchronized coherent
tone; and receiving, by a second transmitter, a portion of the optically split second
unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone as local oscillator for upstream detection.
f(iv). The method of claim e(iv), further comprising a step of adhering upstream data,
in the second transmitter, to the second unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone
to generate a second modulated data stream signal.
g(iv). The method of claim f(iv), wherein the step of adhering upstream data comprises
a step of injection locking a slave laser to an external master laser.
h(iv). The method of claim f(iv), further comprising, prior to the step of adhering
upstream data, the step of polarization beam splitting the second unmodulated phase
synchronized coherent tone.
i(iv). The method of claim h(iv), further comprising, after the step of adhering upstream
data, the step of polarization beam combining split components from the step of polarization
beam splitting of the second unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone.
j(iv). The method of claim f(iv), further comprising a step of transmitting the second
modulated data stream signal to a second receiver, by way of fiber optics, for upstream
heterodyne detection.
[0072] Some embodiments involve the use of one or more electronic or computing devices.
Such devices typically include a processor or controller, such as a general purpose
central processing unit (CPU), a graphics processing unit (GPU), a microcontroller,
a reduced instruction set computer (RISC) processor, an application specific integrated
circuit (ASIC), a programmable logic circuit (PLC), a field programmable gate array
(FPGA), a DSP device, and/or any other circuit or processor capable of executing the
functions described herein. The processes described herein may be encoded as executable
instructions embodied in a computer readable medium, including, without limitation,
a storage device and/or a memory device. Such instructions, when executed by a processor,
cause the processor to perform at least a portion of the methods described herein.
The above examples are exemplary only, and thus are not intended to limit in any way
the definition and/or meaning of the term "processor."
[0073] This written description uses examples to disclose the embodiments, including the
best mode, and also to enable any person skilled in the art to practice the embodiments,
including making and using any devices or systems and performing any incorporated
methods. The patentable scope of the disclosure is defined by the claims, and may
include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples
are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have structural elements
that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they include equivalent
structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal language of the
claims.
The description comprises the following items:
- 1. An injection locked transmitter for an optical communication network, comprising:
a master seed laser source input substantially confined to a single longitudinal mode;
an input data stream; and
a laser injected modulator including at least one slave laser having a resonator frequency
being injection locked to a frequency of the single longitudinal mode of the master
seed laser source,
wherein the laser injected modulator is configured to receive the master seed laser
source input and the input data stream, and output a laser modulated data stream.
- 2. The transmitter of item 1, wherein the laser injected modulator is configured to
implement direct modulation.
- 3. The transmitter of item 1, wherein the laser injected modulator is configured to
implement external modulation.
- 4. The transmitter of item 1, wherein the at least one slave laser comprises at least
one of an LED, a Fabry Perot laser diode, and a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser.
- 5. The transmitter of item 1, further comprising a first optical circulator in communication
with the laser injected modulator and the master seed laser source input.
- 6. The transmitter of item 5, wherein the laser injected modulator is configured to
implement one of polarization division multiplexing, space division multiplexing,
and mode division multiplexing.
- 7. The transmitter of item 6, wherein the laser injected modulator is configured to
multiplex the master seed laser source input at one of a 90 degree polarization, a
60 degree polarization, a 90 degree polarization, a spiral polarization, a circular
polarization, a vortex polarization, or an orbital angular momentum.
- 8. The transmitter of item 6, further comprising a polarization beam splitter and
a polarization beam combiner disposed between the first optical circulator and the
at least one slave laser.
- 9. The transmitter of item 8,
wherein the at least one slave laser comprises a first laser diode and a second laser
diode,
wherein the first laser diode is configured to receive an x-component of the master
seed laser source input, and
wherein the second laser diode is configured to receive a y-component of the master
seed laser source input.
- 10. The transmitter of item 9, further comprising:
a first optical splitter and optical combiner disposed between the polarization beam
splitter and the first laser diode; and
a second optical splitter and optical combiner disposed between the polarization beam
splitter and the second laser diode,
wherein the first laser diode comprises a first sub-laser and a second sub-laser,
wherein the second laser diode comprises a third sub-laser and a fourth sub-laser,
wherein the first sub-laser is configured to receive an I-signal of the x-component,
wherein the second sub-laser is configured to receive a Q-signal of the x-component,
wherein the third sub-laser is configured to receive an I-signal of the y-component,
wherein the fourth sub-laser is configured to receive a Q-signal of the y-component.
- 11. The transmitter of item 10, further comprising:
a first phase shift element disposed between the first optical splitter and the second
sub-laser; and
a second phase shift element disposed between the second optical splitter and the
fourth sub-laser.
- 12. The transmitter of item 5, further comprising:
a second optical circulator in one-way communication with the first optical circulator
and in two-way communication with the at least one slave laser; and
an external modulation element disposed between the first optical circulator and the
second optical circulator,
wherein the external modulation element is configured to receive the input data stream
and an output of the second optical circulator,
wherein the first optical circulator is in one-way communication with an output of
the external modulation element.
- 13. An optical network communication system, comprising:
an input signal source;
an optical frequency comb generator configured to receive the input signal source
and output a plurality of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs, each of the plurality
of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs including a first unmodulated signal and
a second unmodulated signal,
a first transmitter configured to receive the first unmodulated signal of a selected
one of the plurality of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs as a seed source and
to output a first modulated data stream; and
a first receiver configured to receive the first modulated data stream from the first
transmitter and receive the second unmodulated signal of the selected one of the plurality
of phase synchronized coherent tone pairs as a local oscillator source.
- 14. The system of item 13, wherein the optical frequency comb generator comprises
an amplifier and an optical demultiplexer.
- 15. The system of item 13, wherein the optical frequency comb generator is configured
to implement one of a mode-locked laser, a gain-switched laser, and electro-optical
modulation.
- 16. The system of item 13, wherein the selected one of the plurality of phase synchronized
coherent tone pairs are controllable at a constant frequency spacing with respect
to one another throughout the system.
- 17. The system of item 13, wherein the system is configured to perform heterodyne
detection.
- 18. The system of item 13, wherein the first transmitter comprises a first laser injected
modulator and a first optical circulator.
- 19. The system of item 13, wherein the first laser injected modulator is configured
to implement direct modulation.
- 20. The system of item 13, wherein the first laser injected modulator is configured
to implement external modulation.
- 21. The system of item 19, wherein the input signal source includes an external master
laser.
- 22. The system of item 21, wherein the first modulator comprises a first laser diode
configured to injection lock to the external master laser.
- 23. The system of item 22, wherein the first laser diode is configured to receive
first data from a first external data source to adhere into the output first modulated
data stream.
- 24. The system of item 22, wherein the first modulator further comprises a first polarization
beam splitter and a first polarization beam combiner.
- 25. The system of item 24, wherein the first laser diode comprises first and second
slave lasers, wherein the first and second slave lasers are configured to receive
first and second polarization components, respectively, from the first polarization
beam splitter.
- 26. The system of item 25, wherein the first modulator is configured to implement
quadrature amplitude modulation.
- 27. The system of item 26,
wherein the first slave laser comprises a first sub-laser and a second sub-laser,
wherein the second slave laser comprises a third sub-laser and a fourth sub-laser,
wherein the first and second sub-lasers are configured to receive an I-signal and
a Q-signal of the first polarization component, respectively, and
wherein the third and fourth sub-lasers are configured to receive an I-signal and
a Q-signal of the second polarization component, respectively.
- 28. The system of item 13, further comprising a second transmitter configured to receive
the second unmodulated signal of the selected one of the plurality of phase synchronized
coherent tone pairs as a seed source and to output a second modulated data stream.
- 29. The system of item 28, wherein the second transmitter is configured to implement
one of direct and external modulation.
- 30. The system of item 28, wherein the second transmitter is configured to implement
one or more of polarization division multiplexing and quadrature amplitude modulation.
- 31. The system of item 28, further comprising a second receiver configured to receive
the second modulated data stream from the second transmitter and receive the first
unmodulated signal of the selected one of the plurality of phase synchronized coherent
tone pairs as a local oscillator source.
- 32. An optical network communication system, comprising:
an optical hub including an optical frequency comb generator configured to output
at least one phase synchronized coherent tone pair having a first unmodulated signal
and a second unmodulated signal, and a downstream transmitter configured to receive
the first unmodulated signal as a seed source and to output a downstream modulated
data stream;
a fiber node; and
an end user including a downstream receiver configured to receive the downstream modulated
data stream from the downstream transmitter and receive the second unmodulated signal
as a local oscillator source.
- 33. The system of item 32, wherein the selected one of the plurality of phase synchronized
coherent tone pairs are controllable at a constant frequency spacing with respect
to one another throughout the system.
- 34. The system of item 32, wherein the optical hub further comprises an amplifier,
a first hub optical demultiplexer, and a hub optical multiplexer.
- 35. The system of item 34, wherein the fiber node comprises a node optical demultiplexer
configured to demultiplex an output from the hub optical multiplexer.
- 36. The system of item 35, wherein the hub optical multiplexer is configured to communicate
with the node optical demultiplexer by way of a downstream fiber.
- 37. The system of item 35, wherein the node optical demultiplexer is configured to
communicate with the downstream transmitter by way of first fiber optics.
- 38. The system of item 32, wherein the downstream receiver comprises a downstream
integrated coherent receiver, a downstream analog to digital converter, and a downstream
digital signal processor.
- 39. The system of item 37,
wherein the end user further comprises an upstream transmitter,
wherein the fiber node further comprises a node optical multiplexer, and
wherein the optical hub further comprises a second hub optical demultiplexer and an
upstream receiver.
- 40. The system of item 39,
wherein the upstream transmitter is configured to communicate with the node optical
multiplexer by way of second fiber optics, and
wherein the node optical multiplexer is configured to communicate with the second
hub optical demultiplexer by way of an upstream fiber.
- 41. The system of item 40, wherein the upstream transmitter is configured to receive
the second unmodulated signal as a seed source and to output a upstream modulated
data stream to the node optical multiplexer.
- 42. The system of item 40, wherein the upstream receiver comprises an upstream integrated
coherent receiver, an upstream analog to digital converter, and an upstream digital
signal processor.
- 43. The system of item 40. wherein the upstream receiver is configured to receive
as a data source the upstream modulated data stream from the node optical multiplexer,
and to receive from the first hub optical demultiplexer the first unmodulated signal
as a local oscillator source.
- 44. The system of item 32, wherein the at least one phase synchronized coherent tone
pair is controllable at a constant frequency spacing with respect to one another throughout
the system.
- 45. The system of item 32, wherein the end user comprises at least one of a customer
device, customer premises, a business user, and an optical network unit.
- 46. The system of item 32, further configured to implement coherent dense wavelength
division multiplexing passive optical network architecture.
- 47. The system of item 40, wherein the downstream digital signal processor is configured
to hold constant the difference in frequency separation ω between the second unmodulated
signal and the downstream modulated data stream when calculating a digital down conversion
compensation factor e^-jωt.
- 48. The system of item 42, wherein the upstream digital signal processor is configured
to hold constant the difference in frequency separation ω between the first unmodulated
signal and the upstream modulated data stream when calculating the digital down conversion
compensation factor e^-jωt.
- 49. A method of optical network processing, comprising the steps of:
generating at least one pair of first and second unmodulated phase synchronized coherent
tones;
transmitting the first unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone to a first transmitter
as a seed signal;
adhering downstream data, in the first transmitter, to the first unmodulated phase
synchronized coherent tone to generate a first modulated data stream signal;
optically multiplexing the first modulated data stream signal and the second unmodulated
phase synchronized coherent tone together within a hub optical multiplexer; and
communicating the multiplexed first modulated data stream signal and the second unmodulated
phase synchronized coherent tone to a first receiver, by way of fiber optics, for
downstream heterodyne detection.
- 50. The method of item 49, further comprising, prior to the step of adhering downstream
data, the step of polarization beam splitting the first unmodulated phase synchronized
coherent tone.
- 51. The method of item 50, further comprising, after the step of adhering downstream
data, and prior to the step of optically multiplexing, the step of polarization beam
combining split components from the step of polarization beam splitting of the first
unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone.
- 52. The method of item 49, wherein the step of adhering downstream data implements
injection locking.
- 53. The method of item 49, further comprising the steps of:
optically splitting, prior to the step of communicating, the second unmodulated phase
synchronized coherent tone; and
receiving, by a second transmitter, a portion of the optically split second unmodulated
phase synchronized coherent tone as local oscillator for upstream detection.
- 54. The method of item 53, further comprising a step of adhering upstream data, in
the second transmitter, to the second unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone
to generate a second modulated data stream signal.
- 55. The method of item 54, wherein the step of adhering upstream data comprises a
step of injection locking a slave laser to an external master laser.
- 56. The method of item 54, further comprising, prior to the step of adhering upstream
data, the step of polarization beam splitting the second unmodulated phase synchronized
coherent tone.
- 57. The method of item 56, further comprising, after the step of adhering upstream
data, the step of polarization beam combining split components from the step of polarization
beam splitting of the second unmodulated phase synchronized coherent tone.
- 58. The method of item 54, further comprising a step of transmitting the second modulated
data stream signal to a second receiver, by way of fiber optics, for upstream heterodyne
detection.